66 Miss. 549 | Miss. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
By an act approved March 18, 1886 (Acts of 1886, page 91), it is provided “ that if any telegraph company shall neglect, fail, or refuse to transmit and deliver, within a reasonable time, without good and sufficient excuse, any message delivered to it for such purpose, the person injured shall receive (recover) the sum of twenty-five dollars in addition to such damages as are now allowed by law.”
The appellee was the sendee of three messages of asocial character, which were not delivered within a reasonable time, without excuse, and for such neglect to deliver, he instituted this action to recover the statutory penalty, claiming no other damages.
There is an agreed statement of facts on which the ease was tried, by which it appears that each of the several messages was delivered to the company for transmission and the charges paid by the sender; that the messages were of no pecuniary value to appellee, and that he has sustained no pecuniary loss by the failure to deliver them.
The important question is thus presented to the court whether any duty is assumed by a telegraph company to the person to whom a message is addressed who has paid nothing for its transmission, for breach of whicli an action will lie in his favor.
It is well settled in England that under such circumstances no action can be maintained, .even though the company negligently delivers a different message than that it received, by reason of which the sendee, acting on the message delivered to him, sustains pecuniary loss.
In America the contrary rule is a-nnounced where injury results from the delivery of a message other than that transmitted, but the courts are not agreed upon the principle upon which the action rests. In his work, Communications by Telegraph, Mr. Gray classifies the decisions made by the American courts on this subject, and declares that no satisfactory ground has been found, on which, in analogy to legal principles, the liability of the company can be rested. As stated by him the liability has been put upon some one of the following grounds :
1. That, as a telegraph company is in the exercise of a public, as distinguished from a private, calling, it is the common agent of both parties to a telegraph message, or a public agent liable to any one injured by its negligence.
2. That the person addressed is the beneficiary of a contract.
3. That the message is the property of the person addressed, the position of such person being analogous to that of a consignee of goods.
4. That the sendee is the principal of the telegraph company in those cases where he originally employed the company. Gray on Communications by Telegraph 117 to 122.
While it may be difficult to reply to the criticisms of the grounds upon which the American decisions rest, it must be regarded as
It will be noted that this proposed solution of the difficulty begins with the assumption that the telegraph company by accepting the message comes under the obligation of a “ duty ” to the sendee.
If it be true as suggested that the telegraph company by accepting the message for transmission comes under a duty to the addressee, it does not seem to be difficult to find equal liability for delay in its transmission, or for failing to deliver, as exists for the delivery of an altered message. Delay or neglect to deliver is as much a breach of duty, if a duty exists, as is the delivery of an altered message. The reason of the existence of such companies, is not that by them messages may be more accurately transmitted than by the ordinary means of communication, but it is because they may be more rapidly transmitted, and it cannot be seriously contended that a telegraph company might be liable for an erroneous delivery on the ground that the nature of its business indicated to it the importance of delivering the exact message sent, and at the same time its responsibility denied for damages caused by delay in delivering the message, because it is not advised by the nature of its business of the importance of speedy delivery.
The English courts end all controversies by declaring that the obligation of the company is to the sender alone; that it owes no
In the case under consideration, though no pecuniary injury was sustained, there was a violation of the legal right of appellees, and a consequent right to recover damages, though nominal, and to this is added the penalty given by the statute.
The judgment is affirmed.